{"id":23453,"date":"2022-03-24T11:00:33","date_gmt":"2022-03-24T15:00:33","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/?p=23453"},"modified":"2023-04-20T14:03:26","modified_gmt":"2023-04-20T18:03:26","slug":"historical-films-on-population-health-and-family-planning","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/2022\/03\/24\/historical-films-on-population-health-and-family-planning\/","title":{"rendered":"Historical Films on Population Health and Family Planning"},"content":{"rendered":"

By Sarah Eilers ~<\/em><\/p>\n

The National Library of Medicine has a rich new set of digital resources<\/a> for researchers interested in the history of global health and health disparities, women’s health and history, anthropology, and international development. During the last year, NLM has digitally preserved nearly 250 rare films addressing these topics, with a particular emphasis on birth control, family planning, and social determinants of human health and overpopulation. Many titles have soundtracks in multiple languages, as they were designed as a direct-to-the-people educational tool, and were distributed worldwide chiefly through non-governmental organizations (NGOs).<\/p>\n

Funding and production support for these 1970s-era titles came from multiple sources, among them the US Agency for International Development, the Inter-American Dialogue Center, the George Washington University Airlie Foundation, Planned Parenthood International, and the Johns Hopkins Program for International Education in Gynecology and Obstetrics (JHPIEGO). Government and community-based health agencies across the globe also contributed to films set in their countries, including the Philippines, Jamaica, India, Kenya, and Colombia.<\/p>\n

The Population Bomb?<\/strong><\/p>\n

Next year will mark the 55th anniversary of the publication of The Population Bomb<\/em><\/a> by Paul Ehrlich, who in his 1968 book predicted mass global starvation as a result of uncontrolled population growth. This calamity hasn\u2019t come to pass, but Ehrlich was not alone in his alarm. The \u201860s and \u201870s featured considerable research and commentary about the impact of growing overpopulation on the planet, its resources, and vulnerable humans. A cursory literature review of NLM titles and a Google Ngram search reveal a focus on the theme, with data indicating that the prevalence of the word \u201coverpopulation\u201d and the term \u201cfamily planning\u201d in published literature peaked in the early 1970s.<\/p>\n

\"From<\/a>
Google Ngram is a search engine that charts word frequencies from a large corpus of books printed between 1500 and 2008. Frequency of the word “overpopulation” peaked in 1972.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

Moving images were then\u2014and remain today\u2014a key tool of communication and education. These titles provide a rare visual window into contemporary efforts to address one of the most critical international public health concerns of the 1960s-70s era, delivering an urgent message in multiple languages and reaching people who may or may not have been literate.<\/p>\n

A Question of Choice<\/strong><\/p>\n

The most common and consistent message presented in these films is that gaining choice and control over fertility, family size, and child-spacing benefits all members of the family\u2014and perhaps a nation\u2019s entire economy and society as well.<\/p>\n